In a transverse wave, the crest of the wave corresponds to the compression of a longitudinal wave, while the trough of the transverse wave corresponds to the rarefaction of a longitudinal wave. Both waves exhibit oscillation or vibration, but the direction in which the particles move is perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation in a transverse wave, while it is parallel in a longitudinal wave.
In a transverse wave, the crest corresponds to a compression in a longitudinal wave.
No, sound is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
No, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not transverse.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
No, a wave can be either transverse or longitudinal. Transverse waves oscillate perpendicular to the direction of wave propagation, like light waves, while longitudinal waves oscillate parallel to the direction of wave propagation, like sound waves. Both types of waves can carry energy and information.
Earthquakes generate both transverse and longitudinal waves.
its a transverse wave
In a transverse wave, the crest corresponds to a compression in a longitudinal wave.
No, sound is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
Light is transverse in nature.
Its a transverse wave.
No, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not transverse.
Yes, a sound wave is a longitudinal wave, not a transverse wave.
The vibration of the Longitudinal wave is parallel to the wave direction and the vibration is perpendicular to the direction in the transverse wave.
A sound wave is indeed a longitudinal wave as opposed to a transverse wave
The vibration of the Longitudinal wave is parallel to the wave direction and the vibration is perpendicular to the direction in the transverse wave.
Well the wavelength is the distance between succesive crests, or troughs on a transverse wave is the distance between consecutive compressions or rarefactions of a longitudinal wave. the frequency can is the time between consecutive crest on a transverse wave and the time between consecutive rarefactions or compressions on a longitudinal wave. the amplitude on a transverse wave is the distance between a crest and the zero value of the wave, not till the trough. on a longitudinal wave the amplitidue is measured by the strength of the rarefactions or compressions as compared to the natural state of the propagation medium. so for a longidudinal wave travelling throught the air; if the compression pressure is 4 bar the amplitude would be greater than if the compression pressure was 3 bar, because the air's natural pressure is 1 bar. in reality things like sound waves have much less compression pressure.